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Market Research Report
Effective use of Network Management Software (NMS) and Operational Support Systems (OSS): Focusing on Fault Management, Performance Management and Service Management
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Effective use of Network Management Software (NMS) and Operational Support Systems (OSS): Focusing on Fault Management, Performance Management and Service Management published by Mind Commerce Publishing LLC in August, 2009. This report consists of 24 pages and the price starts from US $ 995.
Abstract
Overview:
Network Management Software (NMS) and Operational Support Systems (OSS)
systems have long been a key part of the success of any operator, service
provider and enterprise network. As the years pass we see the vendors of such
products investing more and more specialized manpower on their development so
as to empower their solutions to potentially bare fruitful results.
Unfortunately, there is a notion that this shifted their focus more on the
software itself rather than the network that will be managed with it, leaving
a gap between a potentially powerful solution and off-the-shelf lack of
capability to provide instantly an accurate solution.
The products themselves have the power to help doing a great job but the way
of realizing this goal is not obvious anymore. Moreover, NMS and OSS
integrators' teams seem to be biased more towards the software itself rather
than the details of the managed networks, like missing the whole picture and
the customer' s perspective at large.
Key Benefits:
Main Benefit:
A recommended and tested approach on architecting, deploying and implementing
OSS and NMS solutions with emphasis on fault management, performance
management and service management.
Value Added context:
- End to end evaluation matrix for any OSS/NMS solution
- Real life examples, like networks with CoS and various QoS offerings,
Internet Service definition and relevant SLA, DoS attacks identification,
services monitoring and alarming, IP managed SS7 network, SIP VoIP network.
- OSS / NMS primer
- OSS / NMS perspectives (industry, vendors and integrators, clients)
Audience
- Operators and Services Providers: This report provides a method to
architect an effective OSS solution either from scratch or by modifying and
enhancing their current implementation. An evaluation matrix is also included
to be used either as is or enriched by specific needs for assessing various
offers that may be presented to them. Last, but not least, real life examples
are given, examples that can be used as is to expand the functionality of
their OSS/NMS installation.
- Large Enterprises: More than quite often, they have a small service
provider to run and they use the same products as operators to have the job
done and face the same problems.
- OSS/NMS Vendors and Integrators: This report providesan insight of
how their clients think and a roadmap to provide better services and retain
customers.
- Network Vendors and Integrators: Their products are focused by
OSS/NMS products and most, if not all, of them have OSS/NMS offerings, too.
Table of Contents
- 1. Executive Summary
- 2. Introduction to OSS and NMS
- 3. NMS/OSS with regards to fault management, performance management and
service management
- 1. Industry perspective
- 2. Buyer' s perspective (operator, service provider, enterprise)
- 3. Vendor/Integrator' s perspective and common off-the-shelf functionality
- 4. Finding 1: Conflicting perspectives and expectations
- 5. Every day sample problems (elegant, simple but too far away from
off-the-shelf functionality)
- i. QoS/CoS 1
- ii. QoS/CoS 2
- iii. Internet Service definition and relevant SLA
- iv. DoS attacks identification
- v. Services monitoring and alarming (eg DNS, mail, AAA, etc)
- vi. Future trends in fault management and performance management and
their effect on service level management
- 6. Finding 2: A missing requirement
- 7. Recommended approach
- 8. Testing the recommended approach
- I. IP managed SS7 network
- II. SIP VoIP network
- 9. Conclusions (Summary and Recommendations)
- 10. Closing note
- 11. ANNEX I - References
- 12. ANNEX II - ABBREVIATIONS
- 13. ANNEX III - List of figures
- 14. ANNEX IV - List of Tables
- 15. ANNEX V - About the author
List of Figures
- Fig. 1: Document Flow
- Fig. 2: TMN Architecture
- Fig. 3: Telecom Application Map - Highlighting the focus of this report
- Fig. 4: Recommended Process
List of Tables
- Table 1: Report' s benefits to the reader.
- Table 2: Clients' perspective - Sample efficiency evaluation.
- Table 3: Clients' perspective - Sample technical evaluation.
- Table 4: Clients' perspective - Sample integration evaluation.
- Table 5: Clients' perspective - Sample financial evaluation.
- Table 6: Clients' perspective - Sample supplier evaluation.
- Table 7: Clients' perspective - Sample overall evaluation.
- Table 8: performance management as source for fault management example 1.
- Table 9: performance management as source for fault management example 2.
- Table 10: Transit Internet Service OSS/NMS definition.
- Table 11: Simple, cost effective, yet powerful, DoS attack identification.
- Table 12: Services monitoring.
- Table 13: Performance management data warehousing benefits.
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